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Some Aspects of the Economic Development of India: The Problem of Accelerated Reaction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2011

Karl von Vorys
Affiliation:
San Fernando Valley State College
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Extract

It is becoming increasingly apparent that the rate of economic growth in India will have to be increased if the standard of living is to rise significantly within the foreseeable future. At the moment India is completing her Second Five-Year Plan. The objectives of the plan are indeed very modest. They provide for a 25 per cent increase in the national income and an 18 per cent increase in the per capita income over a five-year period. To reach these objectives, investment in the private and public sectors was to be increased to a rate of 10.68 per cent of the national income by 1961. An 18 per cent increase would raise the per capita income of India to only Rs 331 ($69.50) and the investment rate of 10.68 per cent may be just about sufficient for a take-off into economic development. Nevertheless, almost immediately after these targets were approved, doubts appeared whether the necessary funds for investment would become available. Although more foreign aid was provided than was originally expected, this was more than offset by the difficulties faced in mobilizing domestic resources. By 1958 the total objectives were revised downward by about 12 per cent.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1961

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References

1 Government of India, Planning Commission, Second Five Year Plan, New Delhi, 1956Google Scholar (hereafter cited as Second Five Year Plan), p. 74; and Deshmukh, C. D., Economic Developments in India—1946–1956, New York, 1957, pp. 101–2.Google Scholar

2 Second Five Year Plan, p. 11.

4 Rostow, W. W., The Stages of Economic Growth, Cambridge, Eng., 1960, pp. 20, 45.Google Scholar

5 See budget speech of Shri T. T. Krishnamachari, Finance Minister in 1957 (Indian Parliament, Lok Sabha Debates, Series 2, May 10–22, 1957, 1, p. 474). See also comments in Times of India (Bombay), June 9, 1957, p. 1; June 18, 1957, p. 6; July 25, 1957, p. 6.

6 The Five-Year Plan estimated the expected foreign aid at $1.6 billion (Rs 800 crores). During the first two years of the Plan alone, the United States and other Western powers committed $1.4 billion and Soviet aid approximated $0.3 billion. U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Foreign Policy: Asia, Study No. 5, prepared by Conlon Associates, Ltd., Washington, D.C., 1959 (hereafter cited as Conlon Report), pp. 38–39.

7 Times of India, May 5, 1958, p. 1.

8 Conlon Report, p. 39; and Mason, Edward S., Economic Planning in Underdeveloped Areas, New York, 1957, p. 76.Google Scholar

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13 Recent rates of population growth in India have been as follows: 1921–1931—11.04%; 1931–1941—13.53%; 1941–1951—14.06%; 1951–1961 (projected)—17.60%-18.80%. During the period 1921–1955, the birth rate in India declined from 46.4 to 27, or 41.81%. During the same interval, the death rate dropped from 36.3 to 11.7, or 67.76%. (Coale, Ansley J. and Hoover, Edgar M., Population Growth and Economic Development in Low-Income Countries, Princeton, N.J., 1958, pp. 30, 35–36Google Scholar; and United Nations, Demographic Yearbook, 1957, New York, 1957, pp. 168–69, 192–93.)Google Scholar

14 The Planning Commission estimated a capital/output ratio of 2.3/1. Other sources, however, suggest a higher estimate. Second Five Year Plan, p. 9; Tinbergen, Jan, The Design of Development, Washington, D.C., 1956, pp. 78Google Scholar; Kindleberger, Charles P., Economic Development, New York, 1958, pp. 4247Google Scholar; and Lewis, W. Arthur, The Theory of Economic Growth, Homewood, Ill., 1955, pp. 201–8.Google Scholar

15 The Second Five-Year Plan estimates the investment rate at the beginning of the Plan to be 7.31% and projects it to reach 10.68% at the end. The average rate during the five years of 1956–1961, if the Plan expectations were fulfilled, would therefore be 8.9%. (Second Five Year Plan, p. 74.)

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17 The Second Five-Year Plan estimates that at the end of the Fifth Plan (1976) the per capita income will have risen to Rs 546. Even if this estimate is correct, this amounts to little more than $100 a year. (Second Five Year Plan, p. 11.)

18 We assume here that there is no substantial difference in the annual increments to national income of a Western advanced country and of India. As a matter of fact, the net national income of the United States increased from $384.8 billion in 1956 to an annual rate of $448.3 billion in the first quarter of 1960, or 19.1%. This is about the rate of planned increase, and more than the actual increase in India. (Federal Reserve Bulletin, XLVI, May 1960, p. 561.)

19 Cf. Krech, David and Crutchfield, Richard S., Theory and Problems of Social Psychology, New York, 1948, pp. 408ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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26 The Second Five-Year Plan allocated Rs 4 crores for a family-planning program. Official estimates call for the establishment of 300 urban and 2,000 rural clinics. Even if each clinic could serve ten villages, the total served by 1961 would be only 20,000. There are, however, approximately 600,000 villages in India. Assuming that the expenditure of Rs 4 crores provides for 3.3% of the total need, an effort to provide a clinic within reach of each person would require an appropriation of Rs 132 crores.

27 Rosenberg, Nathan, “Capital Formation in Underdeveloped Countries,” American Economic Review, L (September 1960), pp. 706–15.Google Scholar

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33 Admittedly, it is hazardous to project such general trends. There are, however, some studies which might be interpreted to support such a contention. See, for example, Kuhlen, Raymond G., “Changing Personal Adjustment During Adult Years,” in Anderson, John E., ed., Psychological Aspects of Aging, Washington, D.C., 1956, pp. 2129CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Pinner, Frank, Jacobs, Paul, and Selznick, Philip, Old Age and Political Behavior, Berkeley, Calif., 1959.Google Scholar

34 See, among others, Brzezinski, Zbigniew, “The Politics of Underdevelopment,” World Politics, IX (October 1956), pp. 5575CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Guy J. Pauker, “Southeast Asia as a Problem Area in the Next Decade,” ibid., XI (April 1959), pp. 342–45; and Badgley, John H., “Burma's Political Crisis,” Pacific Affairs, XXXI (December 1958), pp. 350–51.Google Scholar

35 Tinker, Hugh, The Foundations of Local Government in India, Pakistan and Burma, London, 1954, p. 339Google Scholar; and Park, Richard L., “District Administration and Local Self-Government,” in Park, Richard and Tinker, Irene, Leadership and Political Institutions in India, Princeton, N.J., 1959, pp. 337ff.Google Scholar

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37 Malenbaum, Wilfred, “Some Political Aspects of Economic Development in India,” World Politics, X (April 1958), p. 381.Google Scholar

38 Chanda, Asok, Indian Administration, London, 1958, p. 188.Google Scholar

39 See exchange between the Speaker and Imam, Mohamed in Lok Sabha (Lok Sabha Debates, Series 2, May 10–22, 1957, 1, pp. 934–35).Google Scholar

40 Chanda, , op cit., p. 216.Google Scholar During the first Lok Sabha, the total debate on the budget lasted between 15 and 21 hours. (Morris-Jones, W. H., Parliament of India, Philadelphia, Pa., 1957, p. 321.)Google Scholar It is not surprising therefore that there is very substantial difference between sums allocated and sums spent. In 1954–1955, for example, the capital budget savings amounted to Rs 184 crores, or 41.5% of the allocations. The corresponding figures for 1955–1956 were Rs 147 crores, or 41.2% of the total budgeted. (Ibid., p. 226.)

41 Galbraith, John Kenneth, Studies Relating to Planning for National Development, Calcutta, Indian Statistical Institute, 1956, p. 11.Google Scholar

42 Chanda, , op.cit., p. 172.Google Scholar

43 Appleby, Paul H., Re-examination of India's Administrative System with Special Reference to Administration of Government's Industrial and Commercial Enterprises, New Delhi, Government of India, 1956, pp. 2729Google Scholar; and Chanda, , op.cit., pp. 247–50.Google Scholar

44 Park, and Tinker, , op.cit., pp. 2930.Google Scholar

45 Ibid., pp. 301–28.

46 Lok Sabha Debates, Part 2, May 9–30, 1956, V, p. 8362.

47 Ibid., V, p. 9421.

48 The Second Five-Year Plan was debated by Parliament on May 23, 25, and 26 and September 8, 11, 12, 13, 1956. The Committee reports were presented to the Lok Sabha late in July and early in August.

49 Ibid., Part 2, August 27-September 13, 1956, VIII, pp. 7144–48.

50 For a discussion of the budgetary system of the United Kingdom, see Taylor, Eric, The House of Commons at Work, Harmondsworth, Eng., Penguin, 1951, pp. 189225Google Scholar; and SirBrittain, Herbert, The British Budgetary System, London, Allen and Unwin, 1959, pp. 230–71.Google Scholar

51 This is true of both the national and the provincial legislatures.

52 Cf. Kaldor, Nicholas, Indian Tax Reform, New Delhi, Ministry of Finance, 1956.Google Scholar

53 Wald, Haskell P., Taxation of Agricultural Land in Underdeveloped Economies, Cambridge, Mass., 1959, p. 62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

54 There is, however, considerably less popular identification with the bureaucracy. Dwarkas, R., The Role of Higher Civil Service in India, Bombay, Popular Book Depot, 1958, pp. 185–95.Google Scholar

55 Cf. Lewin, Kurt, “Group Decision and Social Change,” in Maccoby, Eleanor E., Newcomb, Theodore M., and Hartley, Eugene L., eds., Readings in Social Psychology, New York, 1958, pp. 197211.Google Scholar See also Mannheim, Kurt, Freedom, Power and Democratic Planning, New York, 1950, pp. 149–53.Google Scholar

56 Friedman, Harry J., “Pakistan's Experiment in Basic Democracies,” Pacific Affairs, XXXIII (June 1960), p. 109.Google Scholar

57 For estimates and a discussion of current tax evasion and hoarding in India, see Kaldor, , op.cit., pp. 103–20.Google Scholar